Rhode Island Foreclosure Information
When you develop a definite plan of action with well-timed, well-informed steps, you can stop
the foreclosure process and save your home. We have outlined the foreclosure process for the
state of Rhode Island .
The Process
Rhode Island mortgages may contain a statutory power of sale clause, which
may be incorporated by reference into the mortgage document. If the mortgage does not contain
a power of sale clause, then the lender has four options:
- File a lawsuit seeking a court-ordered sale
- File a lawsuit seeking ejectment (eviction)
- Peaceably enter the house in the presence of two witnesses, who must
give a certificate of possession which they must acknowledge (notarize) before a notary
or a Justice of the Peace
- Have the borrower voluntarily agree to give up possession before a notary
public or a Justice of the Peace.
If the lender maintains possession, then, after a time, the lender gets
full title. The borrower has three years to file a lawsuit to redeem the property by paying
up the full sum, both principal and interest, that is due on the mortgage (but not interest
for future years). Rhode Island does not bar deficiency lawsuits.
Power of Sale Foreclosure
Lenders in Rhode Island generally prefer to foreclose under a power of sale
clause. The lender first accelerates the loan, then conducts a foreclosure sale after giving
proper notice. The lender must send a notice of the foreclosure by certified mail, return
receipt requested, to the buyer 20 days before publishing the first newspaper ad. Notice
of the time and place of the sale must be published once a week for three weeks in the proper
newspaper. The notice must be published not only on the day before sale, but on the same
weekday for each of the three weeks preceding the sale. Furthermore, the power of sale statute
literally spells out which city's newspaper must be used! The statute further specifies
that the sale must take place at a public auction conducted on the premises, or at a location
specified in the deed. The lender may bid at the sale in the same manner as other bidders.
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